DAVID AND JONATHAN.
1Sa 20:1-42.
WE have no means of determining how long time elapsed between the
events recorded in the preceding chapter and those recorded in this.
It is not unlikely that Saul's experience at Naioth led to a
temporary improvement in his relations to David. The tone of this
chapter leads us to believe that at the time when it opens there was
some room for doubt whether or not Saul continued to cherish any
deli- berate ill-feeling to his son-in-law. David's own suspicions
were strong that he did; but Jonathan appears to have thought
otherwise. Hence the earnest conversation which the two friends had
on the subject; and hence the curious but crooked stratagem by which
they tried to find out the truth.
But before we go on to this, it will be suitable for us at this
place to dwell for a little on the remarkable friendship between
David and Jonathan - a beautiful oasis in this wilderness history, -
one of the brightest gems in this book of Samuel.
It was a striking proof of the ever mindful and considerate grace of
God, that at the very opening of the dark valley of trial through
which David had to pass in consequence of Saul's jealousy, he was
brought into contact with Jonathan, and in his disinterested and
sanctified friendship, furnished with one of the sweetest earthly
solaces for the burden of care and sorrow. The tempest suddenly let
loose on him must have proved too vehement, if he had been left in
Saul's dark palace without one kind hand to lead him on, or the
sympathy of one warm heart to encourage him; the spirit of faith
might have declined more seriously than it did, had it not been
strengthened by the bright faith of Jonathan. It was plain that
Michal, though she had a kind of attachment to David, was far from
having a thoroughly congenial heart; she loved him, and helped to
save him, but at the same time bore false witness against him (1Sa
19:17). In his deepest sorrows, David could have derived little
comfort from her. Whatever gleams of joy and hope, therefore, were
now shed by human companionship across his dark firmament, were due
to Jonathan. In merciful adaptation to the infirmities of his human
spirit, God opened to him this stream in the desert, and allowed him
to refresh himself with its pleasant waters; but to show him, at the
same time, that such supplies could not be permanently relied on,
and that his great dependence must be placed, not on the fellowship
of mortal man, but on the ever-living and ever-loving God, Jonathan
and he were doomed, after the briefest period of companionship, to a
lifelong separation, and the friendship which had seemed to promise
a perpetual solace of his trials, only aggravated their severity,
when its joys were violently reft away.
In another view, David's intercourse with Jonathan served an
important purpose in his training. The very sight he constantly had
of Saul's outrageous wickedness might have nursed a self-righteous
feeling, - might have encouraged the thought, so agreeable to human
nature, that as Saul was rejected by God for his wickedness, so
David was chosen for his goodness. The remembrance of Jonathan's
singular virtues and graces was fitted to rebuke this thought; for
if regard to human goodness had decided God's course in the matter,
why should not Jonathan have been appointed to succeed his father?
From the self-righteous ground on which he might have been thus
tempted to stand, David would be thrown back on the adorable
sovereignty of God; and in deepest humiliation constrained to own
that it was God's grace only that made him to differ from others.
Ardent friendships among young men were by no means uncommon in
ancient times; many striking instances occurred among the Greeks,
which have sometimes been accounted for by the comparatively low
estimation in which female society was then held. ''The heroic
companions celebrated by Homer and others," it has been remarked,
"seem to have but one heart and soul, with scarcely a wish or object
apart, and only to live, as they are always ready to die, for one
another. . . . The idea of a Greek hero seems not to have been
thought complete without such a brother in arms by his side."* (*Thirlwall’s
''History of Greece. '')
But there was one feature of the friendship of Jonathan and David
that had no parallel in classic times, - it was friendship between
two men, of whom the younger was a most formidable rival to the
older. It is Jonathan that shines most in this friendship, for he
was the one who had least to gain and most to lose from the other.
He knew that David was ordained by God to succeed to his father's
throne, yet he loved him; he knew that to befriend David was to
offend his father, yet he warmly befriended him; he knew that he
must decrease and David increase, yet no atom of jealousy disturbed
his noble spirit. What but divine grace could have enabled Jonathan
to maintain this blessed temper? What other foundation could it have
rested on but the conviction that what God ordained must be the very
best, infinitely wise and good for him and for all? Or what could
have filled the heart thus bereaved of so fair an earthly prospect,
but the sense of God's love, and the assurance that He would
compensate to him all that He took from him? How beautiful was this
fruit of the Spirit of God! How blessed it would be if such clusters
hung on every branch of the vine!
Besides being disinterested, Jonathan's friendship for David was of
an eminently holy character. Evidently Jonathan was a man that
habitually honoured God, if not in much open profession, yet in the
way of deep reverence and submission. And thus, besides being able
to surrender his own prospects without a murmur, and feel real
happiness in the thought that David would be king, he could
strengthen the faith of his friend, as we read afterwards (1Sa
23:16): ''Jonathan, Saul's son, arose and went to David into the
wood, and strengthened his hand in God." At the time when they come
together in the chapter before us, Jonathan's faith was stronger
than David's. David's faltering heart was saying, ''There is but a
step between me and death" (1Sa 20:3), while Jonathan in implicit
confidence in God's purpose concerning David was thus looking
forward to the future, - "Thou shalt not only while yet I live show
me the kindness of the Lord that I die not; but also thou shalt not
cut off thy kindness from my house for ever; no, not when the Lord
hath cut off the enemies of David everyone from the face of the
earth." There has seldom, if ever, been exhibited a finer instance
of triumphant faith, than when the prince, with all the resources of
the kingdom at his beck, made this request of the helpless outlaw.
What a priceless blessing is the friendship of those who support and
comfort us in great spiritual conflicts, and help us to stand erect
in some great crisis of our lives! How different from the friendship
that merely supplies the merriment of an idle hour, at the expense,
perhaps, of a good conscience, and to the lasting injury of the
soul!
But let me now briefly note the events recorded in this chapter. It
is a long chapter, one of those long chapters in which incidents are
recorded with such fullness of detail, as not only to make a very
graphic narrative, but to supply an incidental proof of its
authenticity.
First of all, we have the preliminary conversation between David and
Jonathan, as to the real feeling of Saul toward David. Incidentally,
we learn how much Saul leant on Jonathan: ''My father will do
nothing, either great or small, but he will show it me," - a proof
that Jonathan was, like Joseph before him, and like Daniel after
him, eminently trustworthy, and as sound in judgment as he was noble
in character. Guileless himself, he suspected no guile in his
father. But David was not able to take so favourable a view of Saul.
So profound was his conviction to the contrary, that in giving his
reason for believing that Saul had concealed from his son his real
feeling in the matter, and the danger in which he was, he used the
solemn language of adjuration: ''As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul
liveth, there is but a step between me and death." Viewed from the
human point, this was true; viewed from under the Divine purpose and
promise, it could not be true. Yet we cannot blame David, knowing as
he did what Saul really felt, for expressing his human fears, and
the distress of mind to which the situation gave birth.
Next, we find a device agreed on between David and Jonathan, to
ascertain the real sentiments of Saul. It was one of those deceitful
ways to which, very probably, David had become accustomed in his
military experiences, in his forays against the Philistines, where
stratagems may have been, as they often were, a common device. It
was probable that David would be missed from Saul's table next day,
as it was the new moon and a feast; if Saul inquired after him,
Jonathan was to pretend that he had asked leave to go to a yearly
family sacrifice at Bethlehem; and the way in which Saul should take
this explanation would show his real feeling and purpose about
David. In the event of Saul being enraged, and commanding Jonathan
to bring David to him, David implored Jonathan not to comply; rather
kill him with his own hand than that; for there was nothing that
David dreaded so much as falling into the hands of Saul. Jonathan
surely did not deserve that it should be thought possible for him to
surrender David to his father, or to conceal anything from him that
had any bearing on his welfare. But inasmuch as David had put the
matter in the form he did, it seemed right to Jonathan that a very
solemn transaction should take place at this time, to make their
relation as clear as day, and to determine the action of the
stronger of them to the other, in time to come.
This is the third thing in the chapter. Jonathan takes David into
the field, that is, into some sequestered Wady, at some distance
from the town, where they would be sure to enjoy complete solitude;
and there they enter into a solemn covenant. Jonathan takes the
lead. He begins with a solemn appeal to God, calling on Him not as a
matter of mere form or propriety, but of real and profound
significance. First, he binds himself to communicate faithfully to
David the real state of things on the part of his father, whether it
should be for good or for evil. And then he binds David, whom by
faith he sees in possession of the kingly power, in spite of all
that Saul may do against him, first to be kind to himself while he
lived, and not cut him off, as new kings so often massacred all the
relations of the old; and also after his death to show kindness to
his family, and never cease to remember them, not even when raised
to such a pitch of prosperity that all his enemies were cut off from
the earth. One knows not whether most to wonder at the faith of
Jonathan, or the sweetness of his nature. It is David, the poor
outlaw, with hardly a man to stand by him, that appears to Jonathan
the man of power, the man who can dispose of all lives and sway all
destinies; while Jonathan, the king's son and confidential adviser,
is somehow reduced to helplessness, and unable even to save himself.
But was there ever such a transaction entered into with such
sweetness of temper? The calmness of Jonathan in contemplating the
strange reverse of fortune both to himself and to David, is
exquisitely beautiful; nor is there in it a trace of that servility
with which mean natures worship the rising sun; it is manly and
generous while it is meek and humble; such a combination of the
noble and the submissive as was shown afterwards, in highest form,
in the one perfect example of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Next conies a statement of the way in which Jonathan was to announce
to David the result. It might not be safe for him to see David
personally, but in that case he would let him know what had
transpired about him through a preconcerted signal, in reference to
the place where he would direct an attendant to go for some arrows.
As it happened, a personal interview was obtained with David; but
before that, the telegraphing with the arrows was carried out as
arranged.
On the first day of the feast, David's absence passed unnoticed,
Saul being under the impression that he had acquired ceremonial
uncleanness. But as that excuse could only avail for one day, Saul
finding him absent the second day, asked Jonathan what had become of
him. The excuse agreed on was given. It excited the deepest rage of
Saul. But his rage was not against David so much as against Jonathan
for taking his part. Saul did not believe in the excuse, otherwise
he would not have ordered Jonathan to send and fetch David. If David
was at Bethlehem, Saul could have sent for him himself; if he lay
concealed in the neighbourhood, Jonathan alone would know his
hiding-place, therefore Jonathan must get hold of him. If this be
the true view, the stratagem of Jonathan had availed nothing; the
plain truth would have served the purpose no worse. As it was,
Jonathan's own life was in the most imminent danger. Remonstrating
with his father for seeking to destroy David, he narrowly escaped
his father's javelin, even though, a moment before, in his jealousy
of David, Saul had professed to be concerned for the interests of
Jonathan. "Thou son of the perverse rebellious woman, do not I know
that thou hast chosen the son of Jesse to thine own confusion, and
to the confusion of thy mother's nakedness?" What Strange and
unworthy methods will not angry men and women resort to, to put
vinegar into their words and make them sting! To try to wound a
man's feelings by reviling his mother, or by reviling any of his
kindred, is a practice confined to the dregs of society, and
nauseous, to the last degree, to every gentle and honourable mind.
In Saul's case, the offence was still more infamous because the
woman reviled was his own wife. Surely if her failings reflected on
any one, they reflected on her husband rather than her son. But that
it was any real failing that Saul denounced when he called her ''the
perverse rebellious woman," we greatly doubt. To a man like Saul,
any assertion of her rights by his wife, any refusal to be his
abject slave, any opposition to his wild and wicked designs against
David, would mean perversity and rebellion. We are far from thinking
ill of this nameless woman because her husband denounced her to her
son. But when we see Saul in one breath trying to kill his son with
a javelin and to destroy his wife's character by poisoned words, and
at the same time thirsting for the death of his son-in-law, we have
a mournful exhibition of the depth to which men are capable of
descending from whom the Spirit of the Lord hath departed.
No wonder that Jonathan arose from the table in fierce anger, and
did eat no meat the second day of the month. One wonders how the
feast went on thereafter, but one does not envy the guests. Did Saul
drown his stormy feelings in copious draughts of wine, and turn the
holy festival into a bacchanalian rout, amid whose boisterous mirth
and tempestuous exhilaration the reproaches of conscience would be
stifled for the hour?
The third day has come, on which, by preconcerted agreement,
Jonathan was to reveal to David his father's state of mind. David is
in the agreed-on hiding-place; and Jonathan, sallying forth with his
servant, shoots his arrows to the place which was to indicate the
existence of danger. Then, the lad having gone back to the city, and
no one being on the spot to observe them or interrupt them, the two
friends come together and have an affecting meeting. When Jonathan
parted from David three days before, he had not been without hopes
of bringing to him a favourable report of his father. David expected
nothing of the kind; but even David must have been shocked and
horrified to find things so bad as they were now reported. In an act
of unfeigned reverence for the king's son, David bowed himself three
times to the ground. In token of much love they kissed one another;
while under the dark cloud of adversity that had risen on them both,
and that now compelled them to separate, hardly ever again (as it
turned out) to see one another in the flesh, "they wept one with
another until David exceeded."
''They wept as only strong men weep,
When weep they must, or die."
One consolation alone remained, and it was Jonathan that was able to
apply it. ''Jonathan said to David, Go in peace, forasmuch as we
have sworn both of us in the name of the Lord, saying, The Lord be
between me and thee, and between my seed and thy seed forever." Yes,
even in that darkest hour, Jonathan could say to David, ''Go in
peace.'' What peace?" Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind
is stayed on Thee, because he trusteth in Thee." "The angel of the
Lord encampeth about them that fear Him, and delivereth them." "Many
are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivereth them
out of them all." We cannot turn from this chapter without adding a
word on the friendships of the young. It is when hearts are tender
that they are most readily knit to each other, as the heart of
Jonathan was knit to the heart of David. But the formation of
friendships is too important a matter to be safely left to casual
circumstances. It ought to be gone about with care. If you have
materials to choose among, see that you choose the best. At the
foundation of all friendship lies con- geniality of heart - a
kindred feeling of which one often becomes conscious by instinct at
first sight. But there must also be elements of difference in
friends. It is a great point to have a friend who is above us in
some things, and who will thus be likely to draw us up to a higher
level of character, instead of dragging us down to a lower. And a
friend is very useful, if he is rich in qualities where we are poor.
As is in In Memoriam-
''He was rich where I was poor,
And he supplied my want the more
As his unlikeness fitted mine."
But surely, of all qualities in a friend or companion who is to do
us good, the most vital is, that he fears the Lord. As such
friendships are by far the most pleasant, so they are by far the
most profitable. And when you have made friends, stick by them.
Don't let it be said of you that your friend seemed to be everything
to you yesterday, but nothing to-day. And if your friends rise above
you in the world, rejoice in their prosperity, and banish every
envious feeling; or if you should rise above them, do not forget
them, nor forsake them, but, as if you had made a covenant before
God, continue to show kindness to them and to their children after
them. Pray for them, and ask them to pray for you.
Perhaps it was with some view to the friendship of Jonathan and his
father that Solomon wrote, "There is a friend that sticketh closer
than a brother." Jonathan was such a friend to David. But the words
suggest a higher friendship. The glory of Jonathan's love for David
fades before our Lord's love for His brethren. If Jonathan were
living among us, who of us could look on him with indifference?
Would not our hearts warm to him, as we gazed on his noble form and
open face, even though we had never been the objects of his
affection? In the case of Jesus Christ, we have all the noble
qualities of Jonathan in far higher excellence than his, and we have
this further consideration, that for us He has laid down His life,
and that none who receive His friendship can ever be separated from
His love. And what an elevating and purifying effect that friendship
will have! In alliance with Him, you are in alliance with all that
is pure and bright, all that is transforming and beautifying; all
that can give peace to your conscience, joy to your heart, lustre to
your spirit, and beauty to your life; all that can make your
garments smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia; all that can bless
you and make you a blessing. And once you are truly His, the bond
can never be severed; David had to tear himself from Jonathan, but
you will never have to tear yourselves from Christ. Your union is
cemented by the blood of the everlasting covenant; and by the
eternal efficacy of the prayer, ''Father, I will that they also whom
Thou hast given me be with me where I am."
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